Monday, 29 August 2016

There is a house in Deerness which has been called The
Sergeant’s for as long as anyone can remember. You’ll not find that name on any
map but ask and you’ll be directed to a single storey, traditional house on the
left about half-way through the parish.

Ask why it’s called The Sergeant’s and you might hear of WW1, the Boer War, or the Crimea, but its
pedigree is older than that, going back to Napoleon and the retirement in 1817
of Quartermaster Sergeant Robert Stove of the British Army who came home then
to Deerness and his house and family.

And what has all of this to do with the Balfour papers?

Thomas Balfour was one of the three sons of William and
Elizabeth Balfour. The French Revolution raised fears of revolt across Europe
and Fencible regiments were set up throughout mainland Britain, including the
Orkney and Shetland Fencibles – akin to the Home Guard of WW2. The Orkney and
Shetland regiment was raised in April 1793, led by Tom Balfour, Colonel Thomas
Balfour. It was potentially a lucrative role, and realistically, in Orkney or
Shetland, not a dangerous one. However as matters heated up in Europe, and particularly
as rebellion threatened in Ireland, the North Lowland Fencibles were formed in
November 1794 and the Regiment shipped to Ireland to deal with insurrection and
possible French invasion there. Tom Balfour became the Colonel of the regiment
and took with him, men who had originally enlisted with the local Fencibles in 1793.

One of these men was Robert Stove from Deerness. He was born
in 1768 or 69, 5’8’’ tall, brown hair and brown eyes, a fair complexion and well-built
according to his enlistment records. He described himself as a labourer and was
married, although this is not stated in his army record. His wife was Isabel
Meal and they were married in Kirkwall on 3 September 1791. The Reverend Barry
officiated and Peter Laughton and John Voy witnessed the marriage.

Orkney Archive Reference D2/16/6

Robert and Isobel had a son, James, born on 6 February 1794,
when the Orkney and Shetland Fencibles were still in Orkney. Their second
child, Margaret, was born on 1 July 1795 by which time his new Regiment, the
North Lowland Fencibles, had shipped out to Ireland, based at Monaghan.

Orkney Archive Reference D2/16/6

In amongst the Balfour boxes, there are many papers relating
to both the Orkney & Shetland Fencibles and to the North Lowland Fencibles.
Many relate to attempts to bring order to regimental financial matters after
Colonel Tom Balfour’s early death in 1799, but amongst the repetitive
correspondence surrounding this muddle, there are papers relating to the men of
the regiments and these are a rich vein for anyone with an ancestor who might
have disappeared into the British Army at this time. Army service was a means
of earning money, as was naval service (although the Press Gang was a scourge
to be avoided) and the Balfour papers contain the oaths of attestation for many
men who joined up in Orkney, Shetland, Caithness and elsewhere, along with
paymaster lists and correspondence, many with fascinating snippets about a
period when it’s hard to find records for ancestors. Orkney Family History
Society will ultimately hold details of the men on the pay lists etc, and in
addition, the catalogue of the Balfour papers will detail correspondence and
other documents relating to the Regiments.

So what of Robert? He appears as the signatory of a letter
dated 23 July 1800, from Downpatrick, Ireland about some money matter probably
part of the legacy of confusion following his Colonel’s death. He was Quartermaster Sergeant of the North
Lowland Fencibles, a non-commissioned officer responsible for supplies. He was
able to read and write, and signs the letter in a clear hand. Many of the men
of the Regiment were illiterate – lots of their enlistment papers are marked
simply with X. There are records of a schoolmaster in Deerness, George Louttit,
contemporary with Robert growing up so whilst education was not compulsory, it
was available and that ability to read and write undoubtedly saw Robert reach
the level he did in the Army.

Orkney Archive Reference D2./22/2

Robert was with the North Lowland Fencibles until 1802 when
the Regiment was disbanded as were many other Fencible regiments, as a result
of the Peace of Amiens. Robert returned to the British Army in 1804, this time
to the 36th Regiment of Foot having presumably spent the intervening
2 years home in Orkney. There is no record of whether he was able to come on home
on leave between 1794 and 1802. He then remains in the Army until 1817 when he
is discharged ‘being worn out’, aged
48 having served throughout the European struggle culminating in Napoleon’s
defeat at Waterloo in 1815. The 36th did not fight at Waterloo but
formed part of the army of occupation until December 1815. They then returned
to England and it is at Portsmouth on 15 March 1817 that he leaves the Army.

Back home in Deerness...

Robert and Isobel are recorded in the 1821 census of
Deerness along with Margaret, their daughter. It is possible that James, their
son, had followed his father into the British Army – a record exists on-line ofthe marriage of a James Stove of the 36th
Regiment of Foot to Maria Sophia Wood in Malta, where the Regiment was
stationed, in 1819.In 1831 Robert was 62 and on 12th March that year
he married Isabella Matches. She was 37 and in 1832 a son, Robert, their only
child, was born. Isobel Meal had clearly died between 1821 and 1831. Robert had
a British Army pension and perhaps it was one of the attractions to Isabella,
who at 37 didn’t have much in prospect before her as she grew older, still
unmarried. In the 1851 census he is 82 years old and described as a Chelsea
pensioner and their house is called Little Millhouse, the ‘’proper’’ name it
still has. Robert died aged 89 in 1858 – 41 years a British Army pensioner, a
remarkable record for the times.The outline events of Robert Stove’s life are recorded in
Deerness parish records, in Kirkwall records, national census records,
variously in the Balfour Archive and even the National Archives. Other lives
are similarly recorded, a snippet here, a snippet there -- a case of looking in
the obvious places and then the less likely, such as papers in local archives.
There are treasures to be found! Out of such treasure, we can weave the story
of the life of a soldier, of modest rank and background, who was born almost
250 years ago and who was the namesake of a house which is still remembered for
him---- even if a lot of folk don’t realise it.Thank you to Judy Stove, New South Wales, Australia, great,
great grand-daughter of Robert Stove for allowing me to dip into her research
into his life.

Friday, 26 August 2016

We are still cataloguing some of Margaret Tait's papers and. as always, some of the most fascinating pieces have been her journals and notebooks when she just writes about...stuff. What's in the news, what she thinks of it, conversations she's overheard, random thoughts that pop into her head; they are always interesting and quite often rather ahead of their time or still relevant.

The journal I am cataloguing at the moment dates from 1964 and contains notes, sketches and musings. If you substitute the words 'an iphone' with 'a book' in the following excerpts, then you have a pretty accurate depiction of 21st century life:

From box D97/47 - currently closed as being catalogued.

We of course never read our iphones when others are talking to us. Unless we're checking the weather of course. Or looking at cinema times. Or checking our running stats. Or seeing if our baby is still awful on the awful baby app. Or looking for pokemon.

Friday, 12 August 2016

Imagine our delight therefore, when we found a copy of James Flett & Sons' bakery production list for the 1979 show.

We are very noble at Orkney Archive and, although it is every member of staff's dearest wish to spend tomorrow whirling about in a tea-cup, drunk, with cream and jam all over our faces, in the company of tractors, two of us will be manning the archive desk.

Just... manning the desk. With no cakes. No booze. No tea cups. No tractors. Just crying.

Saturday, 6 August 2016

We have written before about Orcadian Olympic wrestler Tom Ward. He competed as a wrestler 80 years ago at the 1936 'Hitler Olympics.' Here is an extract from the Orcadian announcing his participation:

(We particularly like the description of Tom as a 'fine, lion hearted fellow' and can only hope that we will ever be described in such terms.)